The resolution of optical systems, formulated as the smallest possible distance between two point sources for which they still can be dissolved, was for a long time believed to be limited by diffraction, formulated by the Rayleigh criterion. Recent advancements in quantum metrology have shown, by evaluation of the Quantum Cramér Rao bound (QCRB), that the Rayleigh criterion is not a fundamental limit. In our experiment, spatial mode demultiplexing (SPADE) is used to estimate the separation of the sources orders of magnitude below the Rayleigh limit. The experiment is extended to incorporate the measurement of additional parameters, such as power imbalance and centroid position of the two sources, bringing it closer to real-world applicability.
We experimentally implement the separation estimation between to incoherent optical sources. Our method, relying on spatial-mode demultiplexing and intensity measurements, saturates the Cramèr-Rao bound, with a five orders of magnitude gain compared to the Rayleigh limit.
Resolving light sources below the diffraction limit is a fundamental task both for astronomy and microscopy. Several recent works, analysed this problem through the lens of quantum parameter estimation theory and proved that the separation between two point sources can be estimated at the quantum limit using intensity measurements after spatial-mode demultiplexing. However, most previous works have either consider low-intensity, or thermal sources.
To broaden the applicability of this approach, it is important to extend these results to more general light sources.
To this goal, we will present an analytical expression for the Quantum Fisher Information, determining the ultimate resolution limit, for the separation between two sources in an arbitrary Gaussian state.
Applying this result to different quantum states, we can shine some light on some relevant questions. We can for example explore the role of partial coherence considering displaced and correlated thermal states, or investigate the importance of quantum correlations by considering squeezed light.
In addition to the ultimate quantum limit, we will discuss a simple estimation technique, requiring access only to the mean value of a linear combination of demultiplexed intensity measurements, which is often sufficient to saturate these limits, and can easily be adapted to incorporate the most common noise sources.
Finally, we will present our experimental setup that allows for the generation of the images of two sources with different photon statistics, as well as for spatial mode demultiplexing and we will discuss the first practical implementations if the above mentioned estimation techniques.
Recent works showed that the separation between two point sources can be estimated at the quantum limit using intensity measurements after spatial-mode demultiplexing. However, so far these results have been either limited to low-intensity, or thermal sources. In this talk, we will present an analytical expression for the Quantum Fisher Information for the separation between two sources in an arbitrary Gaussian states. This expression allows us to determine the ultimate resolution limit for a series of practically relevant states, e.g. correlated or displaced thermal states (corresponding to partially coherent sources) and squeezed states (exhibiting quantum correlations). Moreover, we will show how a simple estimation technique, requiring access only to the mean value of a linear combination of demultiplexed intensity measurements can be used to saturate these limits. Finally, we will discuss the applicability of the proposed methods in present experimental setups.
Superresolution techniques based on intensity measurements after a spatial mode decomposition can overcome the precision of diffraction-limited direct imaging. We present both the experimental implementation of simultaneous spatial multimode demultiplexing as a distance measurement tool and the theoretical analysis of the actual sensitivity limits given the main experimental imperfection: cross-talks between channels. We demonstrate the distance estimation between two incoherent beams in both directions of the transverse plane, and find a perfect accordance with theoretical predictions, given a proper calibration of the demultiplexer. We show that, even though sensitivity is limited by the cross-talk between channels, we can perform measurements in two dimensions much beyond the Rayleigh limit over a large dynamic range. Combining statistical and analytical tools, we obtain the scaling of the precision limits for weak, generic crosstalk from a device-independent model as a function of the crosstalk probability and N.
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